"a sense of bliss" is correct and usable in written English. You can use it to describe a feeling of contentment and joy. For example, "After completing the marathon, she felt a sense of bliss.".
A conference table and a wall divider articulate the space, along with fabric cocoons into which team members can retreat for a sense of fetal bliss.
Vipassana not only ended his headaches, it infused him with a deep sense of bliss.
The mystery is why a private reader in a public space should exude a shared, communal sense of bliss, while that CD Discman listener twisting his shoulders to an unheard beat, and the cell-phoner smiling at something he's been told, spread irritation and loneliness among their riding neighbors.
"Killing these things fills me with a meditative, Luddite sense of bliss," he went on, fiddling with a mechanism that utilizes a clothespin to fatally squeeze mosquitoes once they have been lured by carbon dioxide exhaled by a human through a drinking straw.
One evening, he was a near-suicidal graduate student, living in a Belsize Park bedsit; by the following morning, he'd been flooded with a sense of "uninterrupted deep peace and bliss" that has never left him since.
This cathartic process brings back that sense of bliss and unequivocal understanding of oneness.
I reported that in Vagina that sexual anticipation of pleasure, and pleasure itself, in women, boosted dopamine, opioids and oxytocin, which go to positive mind-states involving motivation, assertiveness, bliss and a sense of connection and trust.
I love the desktop app, it’s always running on my Mac. Ludwig is the best English buddy, it answers my 100 queries per day and stays cool.
Cristina Valenza
Retail Lead Linguist @ Apple Inc.